Interactive Transcript
0:01
So another case, case of the pancreatic
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lesion, and as we go through the coronal
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images, we see lots of lesions in both kidneys.
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And most of these lesions are showing
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T2-weighted hyperintensity, but some of
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these lesions are having mixed intensity
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with peripheral hypointensity as well.
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Some of these lesions are big and
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exophytic, and some of these lesions
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are small, and they are showing acute
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angulation formed with the parenchyma.
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Which is called as angular interface sign.
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Whenever you see interface sign or acute
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angulation formed by a lesion with the parenchyma,
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they are most likely going to be benign.
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Let us see them in the axial first and
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make sure that we are not missing anything.
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This is the pancreatic
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lesion we are talking about.
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This is the lesion which is well-circumscribed,
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well-defined with central necrosis with
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peripheral thick rim and then the duct is
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seen along with the periphery of this lesion.
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It is slightly dilated distally because
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of the mass effect caused by this lesion.
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But duct proximal is looking normal
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and those lesions in the kidneys are
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again seen, they are hyperintense.
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Some of these are exophytic and they are showing
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some kind of hypointense tissue at the periphery.
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So let's open fat suppress T2 here and see
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how these lesions in the kidney are behaving
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and most of these lesions now become T2
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weighted hypointense with the fat suppression.
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So that means most of these lesions are basically
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angiomyolipomas and the soft tissue component
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which we have seen in some of the lesions above,
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still present, but the lesion in the
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periphery is showing fat suppression,
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so that is also angiomyolipoma.
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So remember, angiomyolipoma has
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three components: angio, myo, lipoma.
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Angio means it is composed of
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blood vessels, blood component.
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Myo means it has a component of musculature,
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and lipoma means it has the fat.
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So it is possible one of the angiomyolipoma
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may have a dominant component of the
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fat, and one of them might have
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dominant component of the musculature or muscle
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tissue, or spindled cells, or smooth muscles.
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So if we see this kind of appearance,
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it is possibly a mixed kind of angiomyolipoma,
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which has both angio, myo,
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and lipoma content dominant.
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Angio component, will be seen better on the
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post-contrast images, which we see can,
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we can see there are like some vessels
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inside, tortuous vessels inside
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and that area of enhancement.
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But based on the T2-weighted images,
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these kidney lesions are angiomyolipomas.
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Let us come back to the
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main point, the lesion in the pancreas.
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We see a lesion during the arterial
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phase, which is enhancing along with the
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periphery and demonstrates central necrosis.
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And do we have hemorrhagic
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component inside this lesion?
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There is some focus of hyperintensity,
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but most of the lesion is looking hypointense.
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And how it behaves on the venous phase?
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During the venous phase, we still see
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the enhancement along with the periphery,
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which is kind of irregular, and the
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duct is not significantly dilated.
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So, here the differential remains between
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SPN and Necrotic Neuroendocrine Tumor.
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So, this is a male patient and the tumor is situated
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in the mid of the pancreas or in the body,
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and we did not see significant hemorrhagic
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component within the tumor itself, though there
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is necrosis which is better seen on T2-weighted
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images, and the component of necrosis did not
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enhance much and the periphery enhancing, almost
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similar to the pancreatic parenchyma.
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So, the differential still remains SPN
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versus neuroendocrine tumor,
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which has undergone cystic necrosis.
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So, this was actually a case of cystic necrosis
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of neuroendocrine tumor in the pancreas.
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But it looks like SPN. If this patient is
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young, around 20-30 years old, and female,
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I would go with SPN. But given the differential
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of cystic neuroendocrine tumor together,
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and biopsy will be conclusion in this case.
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